When El Paso temperatures climb, your body has to work harder to stay cool. You lose more fluid through sweat, your appetite can change, and heavy meals may feel worse than usual. The good news is that smart food choices can support hydration, replenish key minerals (electrolytes), and help keep your energy steadier through the hottest parts of the day. This guide focuses on three big goals: Add more water through food (because you do not only hydrate from drinks) Replace electrolytes (especially if you sweat a lot) Keep meals lighter and easier to digest (so digestion does not feel like it is turning up your internal heat) Why heat feels so draining Heat stress is not just "being sweaty." It can affect your circulation, energy level, focus, and muscle function. Dehydration and low electrolytes can show up as headache, fatigue, darker urine, cramps, dizziness, or feeling "off." In more serious cases, heat illness can become dangerous and requires urgent care. A h...
You've probably felt it: you sit, bend, or hold your body in a weird position for a while (like leaning on one hip, twisting in a chair, cradling your phone, or sleeping with your neck rotated). Then you stand up or return to a "normal" position—and suddenly there's a sharp ache, stiffness, or an awkward “catch." Sometimes it even feels like a muscle or joint has to "reset" before things feel smooth again. There isn't just one perfect medical name for this experience, because it can come from several normal body systems reacting at the same time . But in everyday clinical language, it's often described as: Postural strain (tissues stressed by a sustained position) Transient joint stiffness or joint restriction (a joint that temporarily doesn't glide well) Muscle guarding (your nervous system tightening muscles for protection) Myofascial tightness or trigger points (irritable "knots" in muscle/fascia) Fascial stiffness/adhesion...